Named Entity Results, Aeschylus

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853-54, spending several months in Greece, and became president of Harvard two years before his death.
The close friend of Longfellow, Felton, was a genial soul, enthusiastic for antiquity, who rather deprecated minute grammatical study and overmuch concern with choric metres and textual readings and emendations.
These things he thought dried up the springs of human feeling in the student.
He favoured instead the appreciative study of ancient and modern literatures together, paralleling Aeschylus with Shakespeare and Milton, comparing Sophocles and Euripides with Alfieri, Schiller, and Goethe, and contrasting Greek with French drama.
He published (1834) Wolf's text of the Iliad with Flaxman's illustrations and his own notes; and made college editions of The Clouds, The birds, and the Agamemnon, and of the Panegyricus of Isocrates.
The fruits of his journey were his Selections from modern Greek writers (1856) and several series of Lowell Institute lectures, published posthumously